Hi, I've been playing guitars for some 6 years now, completely selftaught, and I have a problem. When I play songs with my band that has a lot of dark power chords on the neck I get really tired in my wrist and in the palm of my hand.

How do I get rid of this tension?

Zaphod_Beeblebr

11-16-2012 12:50 PM

There may be a couple of things going on here, to really know what's going on I need to know where exactly in the palm you're getting tired quickly.

Just as a preliminary assessment though, you're probably using way too much force to fret with and you may have problems with your posture, affecting the angle of your wrist. It's also quite possible that you're using your thumb to generate too much of the power for fretting; you should be aiming to use your fingers to push against the fretboard rather than pushing your thumb in to the back of the neck.

Dempsey68

11-16-2012 12:59 PM

another thing that may come into play is wrist angle, maybe adjust the angle you hold the guitar at

Zerath

11-16-2012 01:09 PM

Don't have my electric by me atm so I'll post a pic with the acoustic.

show

Zaphod_Beeblebr

11-16-2012 01:34 PM

Your wrist angle looks alright but you definitely need to adjust your thumb, it should be pointing upwards, more parallel to the frets. Imagine you're picking something up with your thumb and middle finger, that should be the kind of position your fingers are in... only with a guitar neck in the middle :haha

This may mean you need to adjust your posture a little so your wrist is still at a good angle. This should only really change when bending and playing certain very specific chords.

Tempoe

11-16-2012 01:36 PM

Standing can often be different from sitting, try to analyze if anything is different, relax your hands consciously, soon it will be second nature.

AeolianWolf

11-16-2012 01:38 PM

by changing your technique. simple as that. the reason you have tension in the first place is because your technique, for some reason or another, is poor.

take zaphod's suggestions to start, and see how that works for you.

Tempoe

11-16-2012 01:40 PM

Also obviously make sure your guitar is setup well, lighter gauge strings, lower action, less relief can all help.

Zerath

11-16-2012 01:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zaphod_Beeblebr

Your wrist angle looks alright but you definitely need to adjust your thumb, it should be pointing upwards, more parallel to the frets. Imagine you're picking something up with your thumb and middle finger, that should be the kind of position your fingers are in... only with a guitar neck in the middle :haha

This may mean you need to adjust your posture a little so your wrist is still at a good angle. This should only really change when bending and playing certain very specific chords.

The thing you said about the thumb sounds logical. I just hope you don't mean like this:

show

with the palm pressed against the neck because then I would have to relearn guitar completely.. Ain't nobody got time for that! :p:

Agreed, it's definitely better although I would say you should probably have your thumb pad against the neck and your index finger a little lower against the fretboard, it shouldn't really be hanging over the top like that.

Better, still needs improvement though, and remember: you don't need to use that much force to fret with and you shouldn't use any more than absolutely necessary.

Dempsey68

11-16-2012 02:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zaphod_Beeblebr

you definitely need to adjust your thumb, it should be pointing upwards, more parallel to the frets. Imagine you're picking something up with your thumb and middle finger, that should be the kind of position your fingers are in...

i play with my thumb pointing up the neck towards the head of the guitar and NEVER have wrist/palm pains, and much like TS i too am 'self taught'

edit: though much like the dude over there <- (John Mayer) i often use my thumb on the A and E strings but when not doing that, i'm doing as above, pointing it towards the head of the guitar

Zaphod_Beeblebr

11-16-2012 02:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dempsey68

i play with my thumb pointing up the neck towards the head of the guitar and NEVER have wrist/palm pains, and much like TS i too am 'self taught'

1 - Just because it hasn't caused issues doesn't mean it's fine.
2 - I'm also self-taught, the amount of free information out there right now that's no excuse.
3 - You should change your technique as well.

Danjo's Guitar

11-16-2012 02:37 PM

Like your thumb gets sore, or actually your wrist? I've never had wrist trouble from power chord, but my thumb will get tired sometimes if I'm either moving around a lot or picking individual strings. If its your wrist its probably a posture thing. I trouble with that last year. Slouching and hanging your head down can give you a lot of trouble with your hands actually.

Does it just hurt sometimes during a song, like you could shake it out and keep going, or does it continue to be a problem for an extended period of time?

ledradiofloyd

11-16-2012 08:05 PM

Just don't play the 9s, 11s and 13s.

Zerath

11-18-2012 03:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danjo's Guitar

Like your thumb gets sore, or actually your wrist? I've never had wrist trouble from power chord, but my thumb will get tired sometimes if I'm either moving around a lot or picking individual strings. If its your wrist its probably a posture thing. I trouble with that last year. Slouching and hanging your head down can give you a lot of trouble with your hands actually.

Does it just hurt sometimes during a song, like you could shake it out and keep going, or does it continue to be a problem for an extended period of time?

I get fatigued when playing some songs, not in the thumb though. The tiredness is mostly occuring in the area near the thumb's palm, so pretty centered in the hand.
It doesn't help too well when I shake it loose.

Junior#1

11-18-2012 03:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zerath

I get fatigued when playing some songs, not in the thumb though. The tiredness is mostly occuring in the area near the thumb's palm, so pretty centered in the hand.
It doesn't help too well when I shake it loose.

That's from using too much pressure and using your thumb to apply said pressure. The force needed to fret the strings should come from your fingers. The thumb is only there to support the neck.